Some turning sickness into fashion statement

An arm sling covered with colorful flames. A T-shirt with "Cancer picked the wrong Diva!" splashed across the chest. A medical ID bracelet adorned with Swarovski crystals.

Call this fashionable sickness - turning a disease into a fashion and political statement.

Years ago people were reluctant to share their illnesses, and often went to great lengths to hide them. But today's patients are openly self-deprecating, with T-shirts proclaiming, "I have ADD" and bald heads painted with a favorite sports team logo. They are making their disabilities cool with hot pink walkers, canes with plastic daisies and cast covers imprinted with graffiti.

"Like the old adage says life happens,'" says Karen Larde, the Atlanta bureau chief for the fashioninsider.com. "Well so do illnesses. If we must at some point be ill, why not look good doing it?"

New honesty

Experts aren't sure what to call this new open attitude about illness. But they credit television, the Internet, celebrities, and the need to raise money and awareness for diseases.

"Morning television and Oprah, settings where empathy existed, that really said, it's OK for me to have an illness,'" says Rich Hanley, director of graduate programs at Quinnipiac University's school of communications. "Pop culture has embraced personal narratives."

And whether it's Lance Armstrong fighting cancer or Brooke Shields and postpartum depression, celebrities show people that it's OK to tell the world what they are going through, says Rhoda Weiss, a national health care consultant in Santa Monica, Calif.

"The hipness is also indicative of a new freedom of expression that came out of the Internet," she says. "Being able to talk about your disease has a freeing-like affect on the victim both on the Net and in front of others."

Combine all of that with the sophisticated marketing of diseases - ribbons, awareness months, walks, and colors - and the illness becomes a pop culture statement, says Hanley.

Owning the illness

People who broadcast their illnesses are not looking for pity and are not in denial about the seriousness of their disease, says breast oncologist Dr. Alejandra Perez, who sees patients wearing everything from sloganed T-shirts to pink wigs to no wig at all.

"For our patients it is very, very important to show the world that even though they have cancer, they are fighters," says Perez, co-director for the Memorial Regional Hospital Breast Cancer Center in Hollywood, Fla. "They are not victims."

Her patient Suzie Silverman says that is the message she wants to convey when she wears her cancer sucks' tank top. She was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer in 2006 that had spread to her liver and bones. She has weekly chemo treatments.

"You are giving affirmation to the fact that it does suck, and it's OK to suck but nonetheless you can look good and feel good," says Silverman, 38, mother of two. "It's my goal for people not to look at me and cry. Look at me and see that I am doing all the things you need to do to have a life."

Feeling good can look good

"Medical fashion accessories" can actually look good, too.

Lorry Gregory wasn't too thrilled with the canes she found when a fall a decade ago triggered a case of arthritis. So the former tennis pro and part-time Naples, Fla., resident began making and selling her own canes.

"It picks their spirits up like it picked up mine," says Gregory, who is known as the Cane Lady. "'Oh thank goodness, I don't have to use that ugly cane.'"

Gregory has bedecked canes with butterflies, cows, pigs, footballs and feathers. She has holiday-themed canes, such as red, white and blue with stars and flags for the Fourth of July and red, green and gold with Santa Claus figures for Christmas. She even has a cane with toy money and dice for Las Vegas. People can order custom canes as well, she says.

Stylish bracelets, necklaces and a watch from CreativeMedicalID.com changed Renee Rhoades attitude about having to wear a medical ID bracelet. She was worried about being branded as a sick person.

"I feel like a diva when I wear them," says Rhoades, who lives in Richmond and has diabetes. "I went from feeling self-conscious about being tagged with something for the rest of my life to So, what bracelet do I get to wear today?'"

There are dozens of fashionable medical ID bracelets; 14K gold-filled with sterling silver beads, braided leather with sterling silver clasps, sterling silver watches with Bali beads. The actual Medical ID Tag is stainless steel and goes on the inside of the wrist. The tags can be engraved with any medical condition, whether it's diabetes or peanut allergy.